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George Steinbrenner Monument Unveiled At Yankee Stadium (PHOTOS)

First Posted: 09/21/10 06:11 AM ET   Updated: 05/25/11 06:45 PM ET

NEW YORK (Associated Press) - George Steinbrenner is now truly the biggest of the Yankees greats -- as measured in Monument Park.

The colorful and combative owner was honored with the largest tribute in the team's storied area of remembrance behind the center-field fence. His 7-by-5-foot, 760-pound monument of bronze atop a granite base was unveiled during a solemn ceremony Monday night attended by many of the stars he had feuded with and fawned over during his 37 1/2-year tenure.

"It's big," Derek Jeter said. "Probably just how The Boss wanted it. The biggest one out there."

Jeter was asked whether Steinbrenner would have liked that.

"No question," the Yankees captain answered. "It probably was his idea."

George Steinbrenner Monument
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Jessica Steinbrenner, fourth from left, wipes tears away as she stands with other relatives of George Steinbrenner during a ceremony dedicating a monument to the late Yankees, before the Yankees' baseball game against the Tampa Bay Rays at Yankee Stadium in New York, Monday, Sept. 20, 2010. From left are son Hal Steinbrenner and his wife, Christina Steinbrenner; son Hank Steinbrenner; Jessica Steinbrenner; and widow, Joan Steinbrenner. (AP Photo/Kathy Willens, Pool)
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Former manager Joe Torre came to Steinbrenner's $1.6 billion new Yankee Stadium for the first time, as did former captain Don Mattingly, and Torre reconciled with general manager Brian Cashman. Steinbrenner's daughters had tears in their eyes and his widow Joan unveiled the monument after being accompanied from home plate in a golf cart by baseball commissioner Bud Selig.

"Do I think George should be in the Hall of Fame? Of course I do," Selig said. "He changed the sport in a lot of ways."

Steinbrenner died July 13 at age 80 after several years of declining health. The tribute came before the first-place Yankees opened a key series with an 8-6 win over second-place Tampa Bay, the team of his adopted hometown.

New York's tribute to Steinbrenner, titled "The Boss," is behind a quintet of 2-by-3-foot monuments honoring manager Miller Huggins (unveiled in 1932), Lou Gehrig (1941), Babe Ruth (1949), Mickey Mantle (1996) and Joe DiMaggio (1999). The other monument, to the victims and rescue workers of the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks, is on the left-field side of the area.

"A true visionary who changed the game of baseball forever," the monument reads. "He was considered the most influential owner in all of sports. In 37 years as principal owner, the Yankees posted a major league-best .566 winning percentage, while winning 11 American League pennants and seven World Series titles, becoming the most recognizable sports brand in the world.

"A devoted sportsman, he was vice president of the United States Olympic Committee, a member of the Baseball Hall of Fame's board of directors and a member of the NCAA Foundation board of trustees. A great philanthropist whose charitable efforts were mostly performed without fanfare, he followed a personal motto of the greatest form of charity is anonymity."

The entire team, led by Alex Rodriguez and manager Joe Girardi, walked from the dugout and up steps in center field, with Torre and Mattingly among those trailing in business attire.

"It was definitely one of those pretty cool moments to be a part of," Andy Pettitte said. "Another special moment for this franchise, and another special moment here in this new ballpark."

They were joined by Hall of Famers Yogi Berra and Reggie Jackson, Steinbrenner's two sons and two daughters.

After the monument was unveiled, David Wells walked by and touched it. Mariano Rivera leaned forward, looked ahead and contemplated.

With a crowd looking on that included Donald Trump, Torre received the loudest cheers as he was shown three times on the giant videoboard, and Mattingly -- who will succeed Torre next season as Los Angeles Dodgers manager -- got the second-loudest applause.

"George is responsible for really the best years of my life professionally," said Torre, who managed the Yankees to four of their seven World Series titles under Steinbrenner. "Did we get along all the time? No. But it never lasted very long that we, you know, disagreed."

Mattingly recalled how Steinbrenner dispatched a plane to Indiana for him when the first baseman's back ailed. General manager Brian Cashman remembered how Steinbrenner's mere presence upped the tension at old Yankee Stadium.

"Before text messages, Internet, cell phones and things of that nature, you didn't know what his travel schedule was. He liked to surprise people all the time," Cashman said. "You'd walk into that facility, and you could feel within two steps into the lobby that The Boss was here. Some people say in the parking lot you could feel it."

Without Steinbrenner, the Yankees' culture has changed.

"He was the ticket director, the marketing manager, the general manager, the manager in the dugout, the stadium operations guy," Cashman said. "He ran everything, and he told everybody what to do. He was the department head of it all. And now you need I can't tell you how many people to replace him."

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NEW YORK (Associated Press) - George Steinbrenner is now truly the biggest of the Yankees greats -- as measured in Monument Park. The colorful and combative owner was honored with the largest tribute...
NEW YORK (Associated Press) - George Steinbrenner is now truly the biggest of the Yankees greats -- as measured in Monument Park. The colorful and combative owner was honored with the largest tribute...
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annie0107
Mickey's a good kitty!
03:46 PM on 09/22/2010
Rest in peace, Boss.

The Boss' monument/plaque has brought back many memories. I'll just share this one with anyone who cares ... I have been a Yankee fan since 1964 along with my younger sister (by three years). We went to our first Yankee game in 1964 (I was 9, my sister 6). At that time there were only three stone monuments, located in deep left/center field, in honor of Miller Huggins, Lou Gehrig and Babe Ruth. Also at that time, you exited Yankee Stadium through the outfield fences (how fun was that). As we were passing the monuments, my little sister made the sign of the cross????? She thought that the Mr. Huggins, the Babe and the Iron Horse were buried right there in the Stadium. We still get a chuckle about that every time we visit Monument Park.

See you in the post season ... go Yankees!!!!!!!
09:39 PM on 09/21/2010
The World Series trophy will be back where it belongs... in Philly.
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NevadaLib
weapons not food, not homes, not shoes, not need,
03:12 AM on 09/22/2010
In the spirit of friendly competition, I have to disagree. But only because the Giants are taking the world series this year. and Posey is going to get rookie of the year over Heyward. :-)
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NevadaLib
weapons not food, not homes, not shoes, not need,
03:13 AM on 09/22/2010
and Brian Wilson is going to get the Cy Young award.
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dwill123
flexing the "golden pipes" on the day's issues
04:52 PM on 09/21/2010
They should have put the Steinbrenner monument next to a monument of Billy Martin with a caption reading "You're Fired".
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Raven626
10:01 AM on 09/21/2010
Can we Yankee fans have ONE moment to pay our respects without the haters and the smart comments? The man passed away and his fans and family are mourning and paying tribute. Geez.

Go Yanks! We miss you, Boss.
03:05 PM on 09/21/2010
Agreed. I was at the game last night -- it was a well done and heartfelt tribute.
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NevadaLib
weapons not food, not homes, not shoes, not need,
03:03 AM on 09/22/2010
Steinbrenner saved the Yankees and rebuilt their dynasty, plain and simple. I am a San Francisco Giants fan first, and a Yankees fan in a close second. I don't understand how you can hate the Yankees. Maris, Mantle, DiMaggio, Berra, Ruth, Jackson, Clemens, Jeter... You can go on all day. They practically wrote baseball history. Steinbrenner bought them as a team that was in near obscurity, and made them a household name again. RIP to one of the most important figures in baseball history.
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captspock
08:56 AM on 09/21/2010
I don't think his monument was large enough to satisfy his ego
08:25 AM on 09/21/2010
Funny, I thought they'd just unveil a giant dollar sign and be done with it.
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LazloHollyfeld
I'm smarter than both of us combined
08:33 AM on 09/21/2010
Perhaps your team can unveil a huge emoticon of jealousy and envy

go Yanks
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NevadaLib
weapons not food, not homes, not shoes, not need,
03:05 AM on 09/22/2010
he's probably mad about the whole 17 more world series championships than the Cards thing.
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PowerPridePinstripes
27 and Counting!
07:56 AM on 09/21/2010
Yay!
07:27 AM on 09/21/2010
Is it possible that Mr. Steinbrenner's death this year and the zero estate tax for 2010 are related?